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Hardness.
Measure of a material's
resistance to localized plastic deformation. Most hardness
tests involve indentation, but hardness may be reported
as resistance to scratching (file test), or rebound of a
projectile bounced off the material (scleroscope hardness).
Some common measures of indentation hardness are Brinell
hardness number, Rock well hardness number, ASTM hardness
number, diamond pyramid hardness number, durometer hardness,
Knoop harness and Pfund hardness number. A table relating
various type of hardness values of metals is given in ASTM
E-140. Hardness often is a good indication of tensile and
wear properties of a material.
Heat distortion
point. Temperature at which a standard plastic test
bar deflects 0.010 in. under a maximum fiber stress of 66
or 264 psi. (ASTM D-648). An alternate term is deflection
temperature.
Heat distortion
temperature. An alternate term for deflection temperature.
Hooke's law. Stress
is directly proportional to strain. Hooke's law assumes
perfectly elastic behavior. It does not take into account
plastic or dynamic loss properties.
Hoop stress. Circumferential
stress in a cylinder subjected to internal hydrostatic pressure.
For thin wall cylinders it can be calculated by Barlow's
formula: S = PD/2t where S is hoop stress in psi; P, applied
pressure in psi; D, cylinder o.d. in in.; and t, wall thickness
in in. Barlow's formula does not hold for thick-wall cylinders
where stress varies across wall thickness.
Hot hardness.
Measure of hardness at elevated temperature. Often it
is determined by heating a specimen, removing it from the
oven and testing it with standard hardness testers. However,
this is not a true indication of hardness at temperature
because the surface cools quickly after removal from the
oven and surface properties are critical in hardness testing.
Several methods and apparatus for hot hardness testing are
described in "Property Measurements at High Temperatures,"
W. D. Kingrey, John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
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